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Produced
by and for the students of Bethel College
St. Paul, Minnesota
and in God
you glance through these pages
remembering past events
searching for those you love
realizing that things will never be the same
alas, the year is over
the memories linger on
pictures are all you have
of friends that will soon be gone
but, you have grown
in knowledge, in truth,
there is the future
to meet the new
You are prepared
Look now and remember, for things will change.
Seek out what has been good, it might never have been.
Take a long last look at what was,
and then prepare for what will be.
Martin Mauk, Editor
beginning alone lonely
stereotyped
searching . . .
hearing, questioning, groping
the trivialities of education
1 0 1]
groping, grappling, discovering
the knowledge of experience
12
digging, molding, building
the foundations
of life
talking,
sharing,
communicating
the needs of existence .. .
13
14
seeing,
living, being
the reality of God .. .
16 17
.. "how among so many ... there should be none alike."
Sir Thomas Browne
21
20
22
If you only had wings and the grace of a bird.
What would it be like to run on the clouds?
The wind against your face, the softness under
your feet. But the race doesn't always end
that way; for the clouds turn to stone and
your breath leaves, only to come back in gasps.
There's a pounding behind you, you wish you
could fly; but you're earthbound.
The Soccer Club really got a kick out of last
year. Showing some brilliant performance and
good balance they surprised most of their
"stronger" opponents. They actually passed-by
most of them and even balled-up the Inter-national
team of the University of Minnesota.
One individual standout was goalie Jon Nord-strom,
a handy player to have around. An-other
was Pete Wicklund who showed some of
the finer points of the game. Even Lee Gran-lund
made a point of keeping the other team
on their toes. What was their goal? Many of
the players decided to use their heads and
push for varsity status. This year we should
field a few upsets to our - favored- opponents .
23
24 25
we had a fine bunch of guys
with a lot of fighting spirit.
That wasn't enough —
the team lost.
But it lost more than a few
games,
it lost a man:
someone that stuck with
the team through some
long seasons.
someone that fought the
fact that no athletic
scholarships were avail-able.
someone that deserved a
lot of gratitude, but
received little.
someone that went against
all the odds — and the
odds won.
Coach ''Mo'' Shields decided
that it was time to step down
and let someone else - try. -
We lost a coach.
There is a beauty which transcends
that which we have been told is in
the eye of whoever beholds; it is
a radiance which comes from within,
from depths we sense though cannot
see or measure. Those we know who
possess this beauty we take plea-sure
in knowing. There is something
comfortable in being with them, an
ease. Why? It is Christ we behold
within such as they and His beauty
in their grace. There can be no
other answer for what we see in
these, and in this transcendent
beauty Bethel's queen and her
court are rich.
28
People
like pebbles tossed from the sea
lie
in futile anonymity
Rounded,
and smoothed,
grey, uncommitted,
a surface so thin,
by opinion unpitted.
The theme of Homecoming 1969 concerned the dehumanization
of man and his mechanized society; evident in the various
activities. The Homecoming drama, "The Adding Machine,"
dealt especially with man's plight in a society where man
has become the victim of his - progress- and has become
only a cipher; and an erasable one at that.
On Friday night, the Folk Arts program took a look at the
situation from other angles. Music, readings and short
skits in both serious and humorous veins combined to make
us more aware that our society is made up us, our friends
and acquaintances.
Dr. Bernard Ramm, Saturday evening's speaker, not only in-creased
the awareness that we make up our society, he also
brought into a sharper focus the fact that as Christians,
we must not only be aware, but be active in combating this
trend.
29
30 31
PEACE IS NOT A TEMPORORY, CESR_TION OF WAR.
IT IS PERSONAL .
PEACE IS NOT WON BY HOURS OF BARGAINING IN
SMOKE-FILLED ROOMS.
If IS A LIFT.
PEACE DOES NOT BEGIN WITH THE SIGNING OF
3 A FORMAL TREATY.
IT BEGAN AT CHRISTMAS.
PEACE .
MARY (INN HANSOM
(WASN'T THAI THE IDER?)
'STOP THE wRRI" - "STOP THE DEOSTRIITIONSI"
STOP AND THINK!
HOW DID WE GET INTO VIETNAM?
WHY ARE WE THERE? 11
NOW kiiHRT?
SHOULD R CHRISTIAN FIGHT AT ALL?
WE HRD A TIOCH•Iti WITH RISIDES PRESENTED.
WE PRAYED.
WE DISCUSSED.
WE DEMONSTRATED.
WE STOPPED -
AS WE MUST ,
RS LONG AS THE WAR DOESN'T.
n STOP,
PEACE
35
34
Bethel women are only:
A. seen at supper
B. heard at supper
C. sheep in wolves clothing
D. here for an education
E. of one sort or another
F. here for a
G. brains
H. good for getting notes from the
class you cut
I. found in Hagstrom, Bodien, man-ors,
and new dorm and occasion-ally
Edgren.
Where you meet as strangers and part as friends
EDGREN . . . home of the few . . . scented with
shaving cream and sweaty socks . . . echoing
shouts of joy ... and anguish . . . where lonely
and gregarious, satisfied and yearning, meet and
hope to grow, not only academically or social but
in their relationship with Christ ... through water
fights, popcorn and bull sessions, - never-again-all-
nighters'', prayer, and perhaps tears too heavy
to weep.
36 37
In a 'manor' of speaking . • •
"Listen! Must be after eleven because apartment
1 is exercising again."
"Come in. Oh, sure you can 'borrow' some ice-cubes
. . . "
"Did you see the notice about the manor meet-ing
tomorrow night? Wonder what we've done."
"I'm making some cookies, and I need an egg.
Don't borrow it from apartment 10 though, I al-ready
got a cup of sugar from them a few minutes
ago."
"Oh, hi gang. No! ,We're not watching 'Bonan-za'.
This time it's 'Glen Campbell', then, 'Mission
Impossible!' 1 '
"Can I visit you guys until my room-mate
leaves with her new boyfriend?"
"Guess who's coming to dinner . . .
=
38 39
New Dorm: Where the action is?
The New Dorm is the first step in campus relo-cation
of the college facilities. Its construction was
made possible by an anonymous grant of $500,
000, given with the stipulation that it be ready for
occupancy by the fall of 1968. As is the case with
the rest of the relocation plans, the dorm was not
ready when we were. Now the Dorm has been in
use for two seasons. Has it been a promising step-ping-
stone or an ill-conceived and constructed
stumbling block? The New Dorm's physical struc-ture
contains its greatest weaknesses. There is
space for 120 students plus two spacious apart-ments
for the houseparents. Three lounges con-nect
the two wings of Bethel's first co-ed dorm.
Sounds pretty good so far, but only so far. Al-though
one must expect an amount of wear and
tear in a building lived in so intensly, the Dorm
has been worn and torn quite beyond expectations.
The carpet on the stairs has torn in several places.
Door stops have turned against the walls they
purportedly protect, having been pushed with
such great force as to cause them to collapse into
the walls. The walls and floors and stairs are hol-low
and weak. These and other structural weak-nesses
are cause more for concern than consterna-tion,
however, and are offset by the positive as-pects.
120 persons interacting in several ways,
motivated by a variety of purposes, and committed
to different majors yet sharing in the experiencing
of Christ provides a unity of spirit unmatched,
perhaps, by any other dorm. The lounges and rec-reation
rooms provide a chance to interact casually
as well as during dorm parties (we have a very so-cial
chairman). Sunday night vesper services are
supplemented by prayer groups which are sponta-neous
and voluntary. Many of those who have
lived in the New Dorm have said that the exclu-siveness
of its occupancy (only upperclassmen)
-
contributes to its desirability and spirit. No one
questions the fact that New Dorm veterans and
neophytes say with pride, "I live in The Dorm."
The college relocation program has suffered
several set-backs because the necessary funds are
unavailable. The problem which precipitated relo-cation
plans — lack of space — thus remains. It has
become acute, particularly in housing, partially
because a private school which hurts financially as
Bethel does finds it necessary to increase its stu-dent
body in order to increase its revenues. But the
scarcity of funds has so far precluded erecting or
otherwise obtaining student housing space other
than the New Dorm. According to the latest statis-tics
obtained, nearly a third of the students requir-ing
housing, most men and upperclass women,
must live in off campus, non-Bethel related hous-ing.
All freshmen must live in the dorms or ap-proved
housing. In a given year, the freshmen may
take 300 of the 415 spaces available in the three
on-campus dorms. Add to that number the rooms
needed for officers, R.A.'s and occassional trans-fers,
and the space available for upperclassmen
desirous of on-campus residence declines propor-tionately
and rapidly. Even a non-math major can
tell you that the New Dorm cannot accomodate the
numbers of upperclassmen who cannot live in the
other dorms yet still prefer dorm housing. The
manors? Even though the men lost theirs, over-crowding
persists. The five manors have a total
capacity of 144 and at last count housed 154.
The housing problem is matched by the paucity
of academic space, of course. Here even off-cam-pus
students suffer. The library, with 50,000-plus
volumes, numerous periodicals and access to even
more, has space for only 120. Twelve houses adja-cent
to the campus provide auxiliary and invalu-able
space for classrooms, laboratories, studios,
etc. The total space available is 100,000 square feet
which was designed for 600 students. Last year
there were 1,034 of us. Next year ?
Elizabeth Anne Eckstrom,
Copy Editor
40
41
Accent on eating
Ode to Alice
From the first week of school, Alice fed to us:
one pot of coffee
two cups of cocoa
three tons of fried fish
four loaves of French bread
five gallons of soup
six dozen hamburgs
seven baked potatoes
eight kinds of salad
nine mixed vegetables
ten red apples
eleven green jellos
twelve times a week
42 43
The red paint peels some more as you drag your
feet up the outside stairs. The first door. A ten-uous
shove. Is it really stuck? No. A firm push,
backed by reluctant resolve, and you're in. Across
the hall, look at the bulletin boards: 1968 Study
and Ski Tour; room for rent; LOST one black
glove; typewriter for sale. A door opens and you
glance (a) casually, (b) surreptitously, (c) not at all.
You move a tack and ascend the stairs. You push
IN and take a deep breath. The moment of deci-sion.
Two steps toward the magazine rack. Then a
spector rises from a chair on the other side of it —
the prof you owe a paper to from — can it be six
weeks already? Here he comes! No, he's only get-ting
some coffee. Quick, downstairs to the stacks.
Almost there. Oh no, here comes the guy you've
been trying to impress. No time to hide the five
books you have to read by the day after tomorrow.
(Who said a double major in history and English
was fun? Must have been Doc.) "Hi," the guy says
with a wink. "Is studying all you ever do?" Having
your heart pressed against your vocal chords
makes speech a little difficult. Then he's gone. A
couple of laps around the stacks to see if there's an
empty desk (and who's filling the rest). Then to
the common room. Three couples and a prof. An
empty chair at the third table. You settle in and
open Eleanor of Aquitaine. One quest is done and
another begins.
Where else can you study what you choose?
44 45
46 47
• dn.
. • '
Christ was BORN TO FREE. This was the
theme and truth of the 1969 Festival of Christmas.
The theme was enlarged upon by each presenta-tion
in the course of the program.
There was something special, something unu-sual,
a sort of spirit. The voices as the choirs sang
antiphonally, the many coloured lights in mosaic,
illuminating many talents dedicated to a unity of
praise, the expectant reverence, all made one feel a
part of this, of God's people and God's purposes.
Yet there was another emotion, deepened and
defined by other facets, that which has been the
question over the ages, of all ages: What is man
that thou art mindful of him, and the son of man
that thou visitest him?
Why indeed, Lord? Why do you not abandon us
to our Vietnams, Biafras, Harlems? Why do you
remain with us when we pollute the earth with our
abundance yet refuse to share with those who have
nothing? Why do you not wash your hands of us,
as we have of others? You certainly have a lot of
patience. Or, is it — love?
48
49
A purpose for everything?
50 51
The trauma of finals came upon the Bethel
community earlier this year as the first semester
ended before Christmas. In place of three weeks of
frantic cramming, the Interim experiment was to
be held. Thus we worked double time in Decem-ber,
and, for freshman especially, the agony was
accelerated. After the last flurry of ten page term
papers (five pages for a B), a nervous nearsilence
descended. The test schedules were posted and
wherever two or three were gathered together, at
least one would wail, "But I have three on Satur-day,"
and another would have his one on the last
day at three o'clock. The library was wall to wall
sweat and closed reserve books were opened by a
seemingly endless mass. In the dorms, "quiet
hours," were enforced around the clock and to
shift in your chair was to chance invoking the
wrath of roommates and the girl three rooms
down. Meals became a relief from booking, except
for those conscientious (procrastinators?) ones.
The week finally came and we discovered that all
was not lost. Sweat mingled with lead and ink.
Meal lines were long and limp. Then strangely,
suddenly, it was over, and we went our ways. Af-ter
a final exhalation of exultation and exhaustion,
the campus was empty.
4. • N do■ .410.4
52 53
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54
55
10:39 . . . they enter ... alone, two's, three's
. organ sounding ... some wait expectantly and
talk, some wait thoughtfully, silent, some laugh
and wonder why they're there ... Doc takes his
seat in the last row ... — always room for one
more— . announcements ... Pastor Lawson
smiles .. . — And Can It Be — . ''Great Is Thy
Faithfulness" . prayer .. . — Will the ushers
plase stand?" . perhaps — special - music .. .
someone laughs, bleacher shakes ... late arrivals
sit on the stairs ... speaker begins ... some listen
intently, some act bored, some take notes, nodding
in agreement, some sleep ... last point ... 5 min-utes
longer ... again, final point ... stand for
prayer ... organ and — Amen— . grab books,
purses, briefcases ... 11:20?
56 57
"I never realized that God could be so real."
"God let me lead a person to Christ
the other day, all I could say was
catacombs unbelievable. -
"Praise the Lord. -
"All these years I've
been acting like a
Christian, now I'm
going to live like
one."
"Why fight Him,
He's too power-ful."
"I wonder how Christ
would feel if He came
back today?"
"I love Jesus!"
"I know God's love,
but someone had to die
before I would believe
in it."
"I took such a pleasure in being a
hypocrite that I didn't want to come
back to Christ; then God and I
had a little talk."
"There's a beauty to being a Christian."
"How God could put up with me I'll never know. -
"Praise the Lord!"
Why
doesn't
God
just
forget
about
us;
could
it
be
love?
"There's a peace.'
"Words can't express
what I felt for Christ. catacombs — a realization into the realm of God.
"God is so wonderful."
A perspective written at the
Bethel Shrine to the God of Knowing
Last night as white men walked
Upon the western moon,
I dreamed of walking through a woods
Breaking frozen twigs
To see if any were alive
Some were.
Maurice Zaffke,
Coeval Editor
Coeval is a very small thing at Bethel.
•
What about student government?
JUNIOR: "I haven't really thought about it."
•
JUNIOR: "It's proportion grows or diminishes in
direct proportion to the concern or lack of it which
we students have and show."
•
SOPHOMORE: "Nothing is neutral. Either you
are apathetic or involved."
•
FRESHMAN: "I really couldn't say as I don't
know a thing about it."
•
JUNIOR: "It's a farce."
•
RAINBOW: "The dean's office has a tie to the
Senate through the fact that one of us is an advi-sor.
This sort of structural tie is the only real con-tact
our office has."
•
JUNIOR SENATOR: "Most people don't realize
its accomplishments unless they are in the Senate.
The present administration has accomplished a
lot."
SENIOR: "I feel that student government does
not begin and end with the Senate and student
association personnel, but extends to dorm offi-ces
and councils as well."
•
JUNIOR: "Mr. Rainbow told me that last year he
suggested that Senate representatives be elected by
housing unit, not by class. I can see where that
might make for more awareness on both sides."
•
SENIOR: "A sorry lack of student participation
and interest."
•
SOPHOMORE: "I believe it is a ghost institution
designed to pass unimportant legislation to ap-pease
the students desire for an inevitable
change."
•
SOPHOMORE SENATOR: "It's more than most
people realize. It touches almost every aspect of
student life."
(Editor's Note: the following comments were tak-en
from an interview with Dave Shupe, 1969- 70
Student Association president.)
Q. A lot of people feel that student government
begins and ends with the Student Senate and
Association personnel. Do you feel it is more
extensive than this ?
A. Yes, definitely.
Q. Do you feel that anyone else feels this way?
A. Yes, all of the 125 people who are involved.
Besides the Senate, there are students on Sen-ate
committees who are not Senators, and on
working committees and student-faculty
committees. It's a pretty intensive 10% (of the
student body). There are over one hundred
people not counting duplications in
involvements.
Q. Why did you decide to run for president?
A. I don't really recall except I was interested and
felt I could get something done.
Q. What do you feel has been accomplished this
year ?
A. A lot, a great deal more than has come out in
final decisions yet. We did get the tutoring
program underway and that is great. We
worked on minority group recruitment and
intercollegiate involvements. In April we are
going to meet with the Concordia College
Senate, which could be really profitable.
We've made some of the decisions about new
campus housing. And we did a lot of work on
Interim.
Q. What do you feel is the most pressing concern
at the present time, if there is one?
A. There is no concensus as far as the Senate is
concerned. If you want my personal opinion,
it's the isolation that gets me.
Q. Do you feel that the rapport between the
Association and the Administration is part of
the reason for the efficiency or lack of it?
A. I think its been really good this year. They
think its been a good year too. They've been
open with us and we've been open with them.
It isn't easy as there is a lot of bureaucratic
involvement. It is rarely student versus ad-ministration
anymore, however.
Q. How can this rapport be furthered and better
used?
A. I don't think we want to go any further.
There needs to be creative tension or one may
become a puppet of the other. I like the way
it's been.
62 63
time'
ORUM
Faxon name
Clarion edit
by Ma rt R.sen•
'-naMte Christian if I don't
"I like Si, writ, I have
eatiosity eieryti.ini,
POT. Faxon. new Clarion
gal wh, likes le hiss w
lae see ien
Pat is a political science
I 'picked politie•t
f:$1,M3ting Pat saiti.
111 he an even,tu bickgini
nay graduate aeheel si
nate.
The Clarion has been Pat
•xtraeurocular aft.‘, ft, Miei
lege. She was also in debate
freshman Year. During tri-m-
ore she was active
Pesee Club tun/ sa8 eleelefl
dent senator in the spring.
Pot ehose to crime to het
cause her pastor recomme
She remains at Bethel hereto,
can get a better education
small school where there is
tunny to interact with the
Sso rs an a more intimate bast*
also a very great m
for student involvement
which is a very soliMrierst
a (m'e'son'_ education."
"Service to the students'
motto of the new- tdittor. 111'
vice will see the Clarion r
&sew:ming, and ;inset:ling a
Gum for thesught provoki
sues and also providing ms
tercollegiate coverage of ne
sigdal mem,
giving expression to
student interests an
concerns ege choir tour heads to Florida
that's 65 member College Choir will head south for its tour during interim.
ellege Choir, under the
Dr. Robert Berglund.
eith oh its tour during
choir's main desti-
. aids, but it will also
concerts. in churches
•everal states including
Georgia, Kentucky,
;Lama.
rem a paid concert in
rchestra Hall for the
List slop on ihe tour on Jan. 23,
the choir will perform its Home-coming
Concert at 8:00 the next
night in Bethel's Fieldhouse. Two
additional performances of .the
program will he presented i n
early February at the Southwest
High School and the First Baptist
Church in Minneapolis.
The featured work of the con-certa
is the "Christmas Cantata"
Tickets for the choir's Home-coming
Concert will be available
at the door.
by a contemporary composer,
eel Pinkham, The cantata inte-grates
a brass ensemble, composed
of brass members from the Bettie:
band, with the choir. Several other
works on the program-involve the
brass ensemble, The rest of the
-concert consists of a capella num-bers,
eePe.„ t sit American youth. Givetleiftime margin.
-.ay dangerous powe The Comets held
ini„, to Concordia
.... dangerously. That it is nowherboek in , the second
... .rte. Larson claims it is I am prepared tiara a tk)-56 lead
..,,a would take the kind Of time (and opportunitihree minutes to I
appropriate facts; that Larson had, so I won't do iro ..ersed the Atha
el me on campus sometime and I'll talk Sc, cis" ne , ra,„„ r,„..,
wally.
one thin
',nt.a,rampus survey reveals
rhe 1969-70 haakethail season
ime to a close Tuesday night with
Royals falling 54-47 to the
led Raiders of Northwestern.
In the early going. the lead
:hanged hands four tittles before
,,irtItivestern took the advantage
it 8-7. The Raiders doubled the
of clarification of policies that have beers yals total 22.11 for their biggest
a consensus of the campus community, and that nOv" d of the "me' R`"'"1 fought
c explicitly stated and critically examined. the Studeef, and narrowed the g ar:• at
Office publicizes as its current operating princple: ''`"me to 28-24'
The Royals' second half effort
that recreational dancing is viewed as detrimenta,m them to withi n one point at
chic and spiritual health of the community and ft -41 on a free throw by Tim Weko
I as a form of campus and. or Bethel-directed aetiVitysata 8,-50 remaining„. pia • •w ere
Student Services Office hie to score only six Poi , '
,hat however. and •
rink by Piet Hein called Crooks :
crested to
CIRCUMSCRIPTURE
AsPastor X steps out of bed
0,- • VS1 ee
immunity
ist interests
by Chuck Myrbo
Daily Calendar. November 5. 1969:
he slips a neat di
that halo ants
li•Ae
the basketball te a
-irked to have
concensus on dancing
ire total
rory
e 'Royals
game a-
Sind, Wis-
I at the
Miner
To the editor:
Our attention has se
as it ,,,, at Bethel Coil•
drawn of lot, the dancing dilemma
Personal i tire, in this problem prompt-as
born to free.
the idea to he carried
year's Festival of Christ-ie,
Born to From. The
ins for three perform-
May night December 5.
night December 6, and
'ternoon December 7.
• for the Festival begun
ig Dr. Howell and Dr.
ergland, co-chairmen of
t. were respite."'
the theme ai
it of the pr
r the choirs
'ed before sun
he music wool. ue here
nts to start practicing
y arrive in the fall. The
•d e
ellether estival Ch:ir' ,
..., one Handbell Choir will join
together on Silent Night.
band and a bell choir. The bell
choir is from the Park Ave. Cov-enant
church and consists of jun-ior
high boys under the direction
of Dr. Howell.
Then follow's theprologue, All
Hail To Th.. 0 Blessed Morn with
tiw traditional candlelight proces-sional.
the Festival Choir sos,
the theme sone
Ce•—•
Following more narration, the
Male Chorus will sing the first
of the song. Different images will
be flashed whenever the theme
song occurs.
The Male Chorus will do two
more numbers — What Child is
This?, Do You Hear? after wh ,,-
the College
Jaw- -
0 la k
narration the sec-
.. stanza of Come Thou Long
Expoctod Josus, this time sung by
the College Choir. Nest the choir
presents a Christmas Cantata. The
cantata is highlighted by slides
arranged by Eugene Johnson, The
by Ann, Dalton
For the approximately 600 stu-dents
registered for Interim, a
wide range of activities are being
planned. Thane activities run front
such things . as ice-skating and
bowling to movies and Bible stud•
ies.
According to Mr. Jack Tranae-head
of 0•-
The people of the nation joined Attending the evening rally were
Wednesd: ---nhably the most 6,000 young people -- about half
politicall -went in of them from the torchlight parade.
some ti ' - that started at the College of St.
United ''s and liamline University
ignore the voice. 0 - "0
In the Twin Cities area .
/770
nem. Ni,,,„ '•o-ted in heavy rain.
and state political leaders roman, WC° •
ed previous political stands on 'shin ,_ rinin the issue and voiced their pro'• lasted from
At the Twin Cities' cute'
Moratorium activity Mt-ator
Walter Mona IciliS
• Eugene McCarthy in
he ha I
t end emee
d once ' ,000 • k. v assemblies in New Jer•
l t
10\ 1C)'
et4S
.
w York urged
osed involvement in
involv
$
Ameri.
of peace 4\11,-- c \%.
i
1?aiC4
ntinue and expand
rally in e system" efforts
house, "1 $,6s--
...
a ici,,,x,„, stration. "We've
and I thin. C3 11si■ ,s\. , aid McCarthy,
the United z 0, ,,ate`' ,e,‘, . r nine or ten
same." 4, 6% , ei‘. . air, , •■•%• time to try
The Minnesota \V vet -' els' a a''' , * a-4 ,e-ee
- 4,- oa` ia* \''' tinistration
hedged the Presto . ekt e ...,x, ..e a', 0 1 of pro -
sire for peace, but s, tea 0 .\,e 0. .‘,' ' ,ac' „a., s,;ae as..;
,e,aaa'
his policy was "to sa 1,-,. w`. ,.wW's. a .,sia ,e, ,ae) sas
'
o i's %lents
save face ." acct a'a', ,,,• e.. evIP ' con.
Also speaking at the aseNS' ''' .06'' SV° e;0 e'0 wte . ut.
,, coy , VS si\k ' \se,-
$ .s \ '(‘• 1.kl' •
- l'O' VP ■ * -,',"
t ...•Ay. The
le a legitimate. home-crown revo. dal ` e, , ...Ries included info,
Owl Potts
ve
Too much talk, not enough action;
is our way of life a way of talk?
and apprehension" So what if it
is. isn't that a sure sign that it's
God's will for our lives"' Some of
us say so, 'out who arc we kidding'
Certainly not Him.
Obviously there is a difference
between us and the non-Christian
student. Most non-Christians arc
not victims of a hypocritical life.
Are we? Could it really be us?
Why is our way of life condem-ned
by the ungodly? PrObahly
cause it is not • --
it 4.-
.,we living for
and talking about Jesus?
We might fool earn other hut we
willnever fool !Jim. We are liymg
alone, and calling ourselves Chris-tians.
P.S. Colossians 2: 20-23; 3:1.4
Galatians 1:10 lent. 3: 13.18
Jiihn 5: 44 7: 16.18 14: 15- 17;
25-31
John W. Larson '71
To the Students: 'Well, we do have a ,as et ta game oa
d I suppose some of our students will 1w going, but I loge •
any students as possible will feel led to come to the meetire
stead," etc., etc. That's not word for word, but it's close el
.1 the picture across President Carl Lundquist said that i.
lesday morning, and I'm not sure why, but it really made no
Long ago I Mopped thinking that college presidents Were I
of like persons whose every word WAS a golden drop of wise
l•sday morning President lamileetst went just a bit too far
`lv doing right now
la
when, exactly does it mean that 1
sir, but Since when do you have the corm ,
OS Sta.
ow ca.
-Atm Week evening
-•seved by
- meeting with aes
•
eSS
;eying basketball against
her schools?
Suddenly during Founders tv••k the Beans,
le pl., to no for spiritual ael,m, witch its 3 way is
ime time is not true. 1 heard a rimier that•God is every , here am,
matter where I ant or what Tin doing .within reason' Ile can toe
se or other Christians to fulfill Dis plan. tI seems as if some pimple
sink that Founders Week is a time to stop everything, :go to every
Letting and gas up on the spiritualism that so permeates the alt on
ampus.
Well, believe it or not the goes on life, with all its little
Ml ree ponsibilities. arid we often c• an't step out of that tife fi
tilt, your opinion and yeur words swing a lot of weigh!
re the college president, arid when }Cite say one thing is .sir
man another, wen, I mink that is atepping out of line No
• for another what ways are God's Ways. I hear trod eat
f we let Hun and if see don't hide from the world
Bethel's image accurately?
"You would he amazed at the number of students who hear of
Bethel for the first time as a result of the tours by the
performance groups" This was the statement made
Staff meeting by James Wage, head of Financial Aids
Recruitment.
"We have an unusually loyal Ceastituency,' Bragg
we recruited a freshman class of 331) with a Terris
working in February, Down Snelling a few miles Mac
record frost.en class of 430 with the aid of six recruite
financial endorsement.•
obvious(„ • lop:ohne:it through our c
he a service Or are they?
alumni, andparticularly
all about'
- several complaints this sem
Julius Whittinger. head of the music department, on t
my edttorship. I was itustructed that it was my responsi
to both represent and guide the students on this cam
My reply to the question Was that if he believed th
accurately represent the views of the maturity of atu
that he find some who endorsed tt•e views he throu
represent Bethel College, and would be happy to g i
waited. Almost a month went by No students of It
by Wbittinger appeared.
About a month later, De. Virgil Olsen approa
coffee shop one afternoon to comment that he had aiten e a meeting
Two twelfth row tickets were
layed on me by a friend, i jump-ed
at the chance to see If rumors
about Joplin were true.
34
art
ival theme 'Born to Free' evolves
n Art, Music Department planning
rally was Georgian legis "C\" act`
Tian Bond. In speaking of oes‘
he said. "Everyone knows it ‘!„,..0.4"
being fought to bring freedo
the Vietnamese people, but to
\
P.teetz., -rustrating season ends
Peitfteideued NI disappointing note
•
cussions led by various faculty
members.
me> ...oat lectures, debates., and dis
by Rich Zadoraka o‘i.r the long ,e.on Staled
really commend the team for be-ing
able to get themselves up night
after night, because wasn't a
very easy thing to do." He went
on to say that thin effort was
praiseworthy, "because of the num-ber
of hall games that were lost
by such a small margin."
Junior guard Bob Brodin saw
Itte session -personally frustrat-ing."
He said, 'I never got go-tug.
just never got on the right
track."
Junior forward Gn i'
was al, ft ,—
Son
outial statistics for the
• were headed by a variety
of plaiers. Andy
es wits tit th
"of the Mesitap shap•l wit
students providing musk and test
year,- 'monies On Toeeday AV will heai
Maurice Lawson
'Variety Allis a puriusse wit
characterize aer thapel service
this year. Since there is no boo
more important than the one is
which the whole conminntrY ga
the to worship, we want
to he both
OCI%
0
from some of the new suidents an,
faculty on campus
To the editor,
We call ourselves Christians,
Who are we trying to kid? Is
there really any difference be-tween
its and the non-Christian
student? We talk about grades.
And how many times have we
said that were not here for grades,
but for an education? How many
times has the grade been our mot-ivation?
How many times have
we said it hasn't been? Aren't we
saying one thing and living an-other?
Have we ever accused those er
the opposite sex or -'
intent ti-•
����� nor
r do many
at the thought of not
ever marrying? Maybe because we
are not really trusting God, we are
trusting our own efforts in the
name of God.
And how much of our time is
spent contemplating our future
career? Is it a source of distress
bet hosts speech tourney, places three finalists
Committees plan
In addition to these activities,
the gymnasium will be open as
many nights as possible from about
7:30 until 10:30. There will be
opportunity for volleyball, ping
pone, gymnastics and many others.
A co-recreational volleyball tour,
nattiest will be ^s
decided against bringing any
speakers. They will be presenting
some ewed foreign films, as well
as some of the "classics" of movie
history. Johnson said it was im-possible
to brine in --'
sb.,er,.-.);;;zn:,interim 70 stimulates iraction
lea
m a
• reciru i .1 whether the paper Is representing the i t tio you really believe that moat of the students on t
- •.01, with thepoliciea upheld by Chuck Myrbo?" The que
Good efirt puts cross country team
over the)p in the cold at Como
`activities unlimited' for Interim Bethel eetics
deserve ialysis
To the editor:
In reference t• 'Va.'s re-mar,
The Column
sed to accept
nterested on-
Or. W e k o's
Abel football
by the way,
here is, as he
no room for
en of either
athletics in
in the other
Janis Joplin is a "mean, mean
woman," If there were any doubt-ers
at the Minneapolis Armory
two weeks ago (November 22l they
were believers when they left.
liraver anit meth,.
Vietnam will
rlouys
art/ 10
sot. as the rn
4etVitri fire,;'
rat { rArs::
man situation will he held starting
Ste + . ;.g
pus
academic study of yea. iSted
e
eaia4•10411104'n' s
Motutale,
revolt in the appearing in the latest tteriera
neeesetera to we like to dit eat eater:vette, a,
the orsonees in tins} 4 few points S[ e. it., „i.,
-..
individuals are oriel
end are On le.0 : First Of SU, Its:' iarase of rev, (.„,,, ,.
K. The Se Mit , 'i m ing the neovet ti n> .r( ,,,,,,
eneee is the tin st aria is it that br.,ii rcitrc.wrii:t i„,, ,•,:,
visiting Whet), ■S : ,th,1 cot:ar:4 attstiiite ,i. ihe Ol.,
Oe'lllegng ....4 thr- * department 'Sr inc Chweo,, TN,
Presidential Candidates
tell reasons for running
•
ti4.41‘ht4... •
s,Assit set sasisieet
d'i'tties}
g.4,14'.‘ r, loserf tAt.b '
• tle•istaie Di: wa,
esstess, xfc4zrn81,y 3Sissiel
its asiii4ssetillif.
WW, Sify:ss4 mist
.tiaaelSS
,,de whet le right fist so
attaaking jciese
?,:awfx 03,9* 441040 0. parta:-.?:az
041 thArt. Vief44,,
Students act on discoveries of
Deeper Life Week speakers
b e C>r>tiy
could have gone to the unisereity aiiiiiiat ii,t , o. free, tint. I
decided to come to 'Nether'
"I started out at a larger acho.,1 with butter feeders,. hat am 4:0
I transferred here"
"T gave up a eyearta scholarship to coins' to Bethel.
Al that point I
mistake nCe
was
t:: ott 'il.dle"!
I decided that this week, I wanted
""L my tumor
'hen
At the time ventured
rinOtj
ta
reason 1 was still az Beth
dministratiofnor next was trot],chagrinnee
and aa,
:r.rnite saziuottia
to
ark up lock, stack
After the first mom itiOn
a junior and air n a. raise
by tranferrIng " Anzio.
„ ,Vica
waa„
The numbers have been carefollY
drawn and some of the Bethel
fellows got bigger ones than others
in the recent Selectii Service
se
Knight's hope that another meet-ing
can he arranged in the next
couple of weeks.
Tom Getsch, former Bethel stu-dent
now serving actively in the
Navy, attended the meeting to ex-press
his concern (or the, attitude
of the Christian in the Armed
Forces. He expressed his own feel-dining
room table to a fireplace.
From just looking at each other
to being together.
Joplin's band had a well round-ed
force. Balance coming from the
bass and two saxes that played
tough blues. A trumpet tied it
together, The baritone sax man
doubled as a singer and did most
t is, learning.
After contemplating that particular I,
. time, 1 decided that the key concept was in'
the dictionary. t'our.d the ••rrl . 'insist:e -
light felt there is
need to panic and
vised that students
derrment status. No
be given, according
ecause area quotas
to be met and if a
has no one with a
300 then the fellow
301 will be called.
son emphasized the
importance of getting the facts
first and then, making a derision
after those facts are in and weigh-ed,
"No one knows the future,"
says Lawson. "There are too many
variables," An
is just anoth
the of the mei
erica.
togs in regard to his exPnrinh,
iu the Navy when he Said, "ft was
rough experience Si the start.
but now I can NO' it WAS highly
challenged the f&
id to accept airs
'pen as the leading
an epportunity
awe to Benefit tom:
e, a Bethel student
r Marine drill sar
nswered away qui,-
:hat really happens
and he also gave
ortlifillott on how to
training while in
e explained and em-iportance
of a "clear
not depending upon
onuses of a recruit-
Christ for communication
-- are Bethelites hiding?.
I mu strolling down Arona last week swing with thr birds, grooving
with the elements and generally digging the day when I spotted this
fellow who had doublecrossed me.
I socked-it-to-em in the eye. Zap. No response, He stood there
like a dummy, Undaunted, I gave it to hint in the other eye. His eyee
clouded, his nose twitched with disdain, his rubbery lips formed a self-righteous smirk.
He turned on hts heel and wondered off convinced that he had
suppressed his baser instincts by "turning the other cheek"
instructed his followers to do I stood, mouth SS Christ has agape, my feelings of frustration and alienation conpounded.
Just the other day I again was walking on Arona, this time heading
Ih ome to eat some supper before hurrying to the Senate meeting. Again spotted John Doe, and air
Matmen seek vengeance in
season's finale at Pillsbury
The Royal grapplers went down
in defeat, 33.3. Saturday against
the Southwest State Mustangs
This Saturday they travel to Pala,
bury for the final nice' of the
year.
The Royals were shut out of the
•m column in all of the individual
matches until Bob Olsen decision-ed
hisman for Bethel's only score.
Southwest was a strong team with
a very sutessful record behind
them when they rush, to Bethel.
The Royals did. however, put
up a fight in several of the weight
classes. At Int pounds Bob Downey
nearly won but finally was de-cisioned.
Lee Granlund, wrestling-in
the 126 pound class, was leading
his opponent by three points with
less than a minute to go when he
Bob Olsen nearly pins his man in last Saturday's wrestling
meet,
lid:watt"
earls with
what he
gr 01,f BETHEL F eri
i. Ekbam lost to a 123 pound-cc
who had pinned him twice be-fore,
and Doug Warring was on
his way to a Win but he reinjured
his shoulder and lost,
So with the score 204 Olsen
came onto the mats to a roar from
the stands, Although the crowd
was chanting for a pan On numer
au* occasions. Bob did not pin
him. Rock Hendrickson was pinned
in the heavyweight division and
that finished the scoring, the final
score being 33-3.
Saturday will find the wrestlers
at Pillabury for a 7:30 p.m. meet
against a team that has already
beaten the Royals this season in
an earlier m
two learns
0,4 is'
Lottery has Bethel men
Does music dept. represent reconsidering the future
Alumnus berates Bethel's isolation
expounds on the merits of exposure
Education requires involvement;
put time where your mouth is
Concert tebieto
Janis Joplin belts out the rock-blues
utes strong and was still going. He
couldn't he shut off. Their last
number called for group partici-pation
with the lead singer going
out down through the aisles and
encouraging people to clap. Crow
was a little too much like Credence
Clearwater for my taste, but the
lead man and drummer made a
good showing.
66 67
•
MUM IMP. allli Mil MN 10
NM IMO .11111111111NaNal NNW
MINN OMNI NMI 1111.111W
IOW In **eve 141 MIIIIIIR
68 69
FOR OUR SCHOOL
I
70 71
"In high school I was voted most
shy in my senior class so it was
kind of shocking when I found out
I was queen . . . surprise, happy .
then I cried . . . "
"First time I've ever been kissed
by a faculty member (Mr. Healy)
. . . and last."
"Wish there could have been more
activities during the weekend.-
"Camelot was just beautiful, the
food was really good and what a
tremendous atmosphere . . . Having
the coronation at Camelot was nice
but if it had been at school more
people could have been involved."
"The whole weekend was something
I had wished for.-
(reflections of the 1969-70 Sno
Daz queen Penny Watson)
72 73
basketball — 1. a game played with a ball between two
teams of five players each, on a rec-tangular
court usually indoors, each
team attempting to throw the ball
through its own basket and to prevent
the other team from scoring, the win-ner
being the team that scores the
most points.
2. a spherical ball made of an airtight
rubber case covered with leather of-ficially
from 29 to 30 in. circumfer-ence
and 20 to 22 ounces in weight.
(the following was taken from the December 12, 1969
CLARION in an article written by Marg Erickson).
As those last few seconds ticked off on the clock the
score remained tied and the first overtime was started.
Mac made the first basket and then managed to hold that
ball for what seemed to me like an eternity when sudden-ly
Dan Larson did what you read about in other sports
copy but never in your own, he dropped the ball through
that basket as the horn was blowing and the game went
into a second overtime. The second overtime was ours
and such a fine display of ball handling as I have ever
seen. (I had a front row seat right at our basket.) We were
up, we were tied but in the last overtime we were never
down and the one final shot in the last few seconds gave
us a victory of 50-48 over Macalester College.
75
76 77
action
4
anticipation contemplation
Close
only
counts in
horseshoes and
grenades
freshmen .. .
78 79
The crowd roars,
Olsen walks onto the mat.
The opponent looks away,
his stomach turns, his knees quiver.
The referee blows his whistle,
each wrestler faces the other.
There's a sudden movement,
a flash.
The opponent finds himself in the air.
The crowd screams,
- Pin, Pin, Pin, Pin l"
There's a crash, he's stretched
out on the mat.
- Pin! Pin!"
There's a slap as the ref
motions a pin.
Silence.
All eyes turn to the clock,
only 21 seconds had ticked off.
Olsen walks off —
the crowd roars.
80
81
a grimace of pain .. .
a sign of endurance,
giving all you got, even though there's sometimes little to give.
just look at the face ..
expressions tell so much more than words.
you wonder whether it's worth all the exertion,
there's really no prize,
no honor,
just a little satisfaction .. .
intramurals
82 83
Editor's note: the following is from an interview
that staff writer Betty Eckstrom had with senior
drama major, Bob Bryant.
Q. Probably the first question that most people
would ask, and I can be no exception, is, what
is the purpose of a drama program at Bethel?
A. 1. It provides an outlet for expression in a dif-ferent
manner from that offered by music or lit-erature.
2. It gives an opportunity for quality
dramatic literature to be presented at campus
activities at low expense. 3. It trains Christians
in the field so that Christ can be involved. 4. It
provides possible training for Christian
playwrights.
Q. What has been done by the drama department
this year ?
A. Steve Terell, the newest member of the speech
staff, directed the Homecoming play, The Add-ing
Machine, by Elmer Rice. I was the lead in
this expressionistic play of the 1920's which
deals with man's dehumanization, mechaniza-tion
and automation. For my senior thesis, I
directed a play by Eugene O'Neil, Long Day's
Journey Into Night. The moving, dramatic sto-ry
is taken from a day in the life of O'Neil him-self.
Two other plays were also presented — A
Day in the Life of Ottoman, written and direct-ed
by Steve Brachlow, and The Comfortable
Pew, written by Milton Dickens and directed
by Jerry Sather.
Q What has been accomplished by the drama
department?
A. 1. The introduction of quality secular drama by
Rice and O'Neil aided in the overthrow of the
idea that a Christian cannot act in a secular
play. 2. Most production was moved to the Lit-tle
Theatre of Northwestern Seminary; this
offered an opportunity to act on better staging
than is available at Bethel. 3. More people have
become involved — new actors, new faculty,
new potential.
Q. How does the future look?
A. The outlook is good. A "stage" area has been
allocated in the main building of the new cam-pus
which will be used just for drama — no
more having to schedule rehearsals around
classes and music, no more having up and tak-ing
down every night. Next year plans look
good. New Talents will be revived. Dale Rott
plans to take a tour to Japan and the Orient, if
possible. A drama major will be added. The
program will continue to grow with expanded
academic offerings and more people.
Q. One last question. How did you become in-volved
in the drama program?
A. My original involvement in drama came as a
result of a publicity flyer sent to me the sum-mer
before my freshman year. New Talents was
offered that year. After that, Homecoming led
to a deeper involvement in the drama program,
including two national tours and numerous on
campus plays.
85
86 87
on
mut meusas& ** mtoamz ialma_rtaNiiINE
Bo Conrad Spit Band
Jug band music . .
was a treat .. .
Way down south Memphis, Tennessee,
Jug band music sounds so sweet to
me.
'Cause it sounds so sweet, OH, it's
hard to beat.
Jug band music certainly was a
treat to me.
• • •
So I took off my socks, I took off
my shoes.
I danced all night to the jug band
blues.
'Cause it sounds so sweet, OH, it's
hard to beat.
Jug band music certainly was a
treat to me.
Memphis Jug Band
89
one remembers when he was young:
"practice for one hour straight now,
and don't play around."
"you're a half a step to low, practice
on that note some more."
"practice makes perfect?"
"now if you want to make good keep practicing . .
practice ..
so you keep practicing until
you can't stand it, then you
practice some more. you go
through the music in your
sleep; you dream every note.
you practice, and then .. .
90 91
performance .. .
performance .. .
"At Bethel we believe
in stressing
performance"
perfection
Four wins close baseball year
(The following is an article taken from the last is-sue
of the Clarion.)
Last Saturday the baseball team beat North
Central Bible College by a score of 11-6 to finish
the year with a 6-10 record. The team finished the
season with four consecutive wins.
Along with the ending of the season, two men
will be ending their careers at Bethel, namely Dean
Ericson and this year's most valuable player Bill
Painter. Dean and Bill were major assets to the
team this year not only as baseball co-captains, but
also as being among the top hitters.
The biggest standouts this year were Steve
Hanson and his excellent hitting, and pitcher Low-ell
Richardson who compiled a 2-3 record. Gary
Clark led the team in extra-base hits and rookie
Tim Eddy led in RBI's.
94 95
96
"the best season record of any
sport at Bethel this year"
. . . Hasselblad named most valuable
when missing a putt;
there's a grimace of "pain"
As soon as you step on that first tee you know it's there;
you can feel it deep inside.
No one else knows it's there .. .
Why, if anyone was to look at you at that very moment they'd
notice nothing unusual.
Your swing is smooth, your stance is perfect.
It's the little things that give you away.
You ask yourself, "Am I keeping my head down, swinging
too fast, maybe I'm dropping my shoulder?"
But nobody else knows, and nobody else can see .. .
unless by the faintest chance you give yourself away
when missing a putt; there's a grimace of ''pain. -
Then maybe, just maybe they realize that in the game of
golf there is indwelled in each, an inner tension .. .
(The following is a portion of an article which ap-peared
in the last issue of the Clarion.)
Coach Gene Glader was fairly satisfied with the
way the season went, all factors considered. The
team will be losing three seniors: Co-captain Dave
Pound, jumper Pete Roemer, and weight man Fred
Swedberg. Coach Glader commented, "Their loss
will hurt us a lot and we'll need some new faces in
the sprint and jumping events."
Swedberg's loss will lessen the team's depth in
weight events. Coach Glader added however that
"I'm not at all discouraged and we should be fairly
strong next year." He concluded by saying, "There
is a possibility of having some outstanding fresh-man
prospects for next year, although that is not a
certainty at this time."
Coach Glader fairly satisfied with the way the season went
98 99
spring
festival
Because I was so intimately involved with the
All-School Banquet, be assured that anything I
may say objectively is accidental.
The All-School Banquet this year was held at
the Radisson Hotel in Minneapolis on May twen-ty-
third. It was sponsored by the Social Commit-tee
and paid for from a special fund of the Presi-dent's
Office which gets its money from fees the
students pay. The program was multi-media
(tapes, records, slides, films, etc.) and the theme
was "The Body of Bethel." Oh, you knew that
already? Well, readers since that has been settled,
we now take you to an All-School Writer's Meet-ing
via an unrehearsed unraveled transcript cour-tesy
of the unsung heroes and heroines which
made said evening possible. You will understand,
of course that it is not a "typical" meeting since
none of them could be so classed. Locale: Some-where
in Roseville. Time: 7:00 p.m. Cast: that
would be telling. Agenda: 2,500 slides. Props: One
balky slide projector, five notebooks, an old bugle,
and the usual furnishings (not that those weren't).
Three are there on time. Five come within the next
forty-five minutes. Host rubs hands nervously,
glances at wrist, clears throat, smiles, toys with
glasses. "OK folks, I guess we can begin. Does
anyone have minutes of the last — " The blonde
breaks in, "Do you have the slides? Donovan said
— " Goodman, who has been toying with the bu-gle,
makes a comment which elicits a "You — out!"
from J.U. Pelto grins and throws in a Greenerism.
Hugh and Sherrie, having resolved we must get
something done, order in tandem. After juggling
boxes of slides, we are ready and the lights go out.
Five minutes later, the slides no longer slide.
Hugh grimaces. Sherrie rallies the writers. "Look,
we have to do the skits yet. Now, the athletic — "
Hugh breaks in, "The Secret Wife of Murray
Sitte." Sherrie resumes. "And we have to cast — "
Pelto, "Say, did you hear the one — " Hugh si-lences
us. The show must go on. And on. And on.
Have you ever looked at 2,500 slides? After a while
they all look upside down. 9:30. 10:00. 10:30.
"OK folks, let's wrap it up." Goodman plays taps
and we head out.
Betty Eckstrom
102
103
Why student missions?
Christ commanded his disciples to go
into all the world to bring the Good
News. That was centuries ago. The
command is the same today, but look at
the world. Today as our physical globe
shrinks, we are made more aware of the
world and its problems. What a challenge
this presents to the Christian who wants
to make a difference in his world. This
summer my world happens to be in Eu-rope.
I have been assigned to work for
Trans-World Radio in Monaco, which
has an outreach into Europe, Russia and
her satellites, and the Arab countries. I
am excited about the avenues of oppor-tunity
ahead of me. To me Europe seems
ripe for an awakening. People have stag-nated
under the fading influence of the
state church. Eastern Europeans face po-litical
and social persecution for overt
profession of Christianity. People are
looking for some relevance between
Christianity and their life in this decade.
Humans everywhere are searching for
some solution. I am personally chal-lenged
by this because I desire to share
with others not necessarily what Christ
can do for a church, or other individuals,
but what He has done in my own life —
in my world. To constantly reflect this
spirit will be my prayer for the summer
and I hope it will mature and expand into
the other worlds I enter next fall.
Participation in the student mission-ary
program is potentially one of the
most exciting experiences that Bethel
offers its students. God's mission field
is, of course, all around us, but I'm look-ing
forward to the fresh perspective on
my Christian commitment that living in
another culture will provide. I am partic-ularly
excited about being sent to the
White Earth Indian Reservation in
Northern Minnesota. This is not only an
opportunity to share the love and mes-sage
that Christ has given to me, but a
chance to experience first hand the living
conditions on an Indian reservation. If I
am to have an effective ministry this
summer, I realize that I have to educate
myself to the ways and culture of the
Indian. My research and encounters with
the Indians in the area have already been
a blessing and I'm sure God will prepare
the way so that His work can be done
this summer.
Hugh McLeod
I have only to place myself in a non-
Christian home, whether it be here or in
another country, and I realize the basic
reason why I firmly believe in missions.
(If I didn't have Christ, I'd hope someone
was doing something to tell me of His
grace). The other reasons all revolve
around knowing personally several for-eign
missionaries, seeing their enthusi-asm
about their field, and watching their
work grow as they serve. It may be hard
for some to believe, but I really get excit-ed
about missions. I guess that's why I
applied to be a student missionary this
year. Like most, I have a lot of pre-con-ceived
ideas about the work done, and
I'm not quite sure if I have that extra
something it takes to be an effective full-time
witness. This summer, as I go to
Alaska, I expect to find my limitations
and see if missionary service is really for
me. I'm lucky! I have a complete summer
to see if full-time Christian service is
God's will for my life, by practical expe-rience.
Though I expect to be working
hard, I anticipate enjoying myself to the
fullest. (Occasionally, I even feel guilty
having the students pay for 'my'
opportunity !)
Cindy Rostollan
I am excited and looking forward to a
wonderful summer of Christian fellow-ship
and learning. The Belgium Gospel
Mission, Brussels, Belgium, has agreed
to let me share with them the spreading
of the gospel. The three main areas
which I will be working in are camp
counseling, evangelistic campaign prepa-ration,
and gospel team work. The pray-ers
and financial support of the Bethel
students have made this project a reality.
I thank God for this.
Pat Chase
Pat Tyberg
104 105
Nothing we have done in the past will ever be good enough again
Senior pictures
Marlys
Psychology
Robert Downey
Christianity
A. Dean Pearson
Sociology
Dean Ericson
Psychology
110
Paul Johnson
Sociology
Linda Ahlstrand
Pre-Social Work
Beverly Pearson
Music Education
Robert Olsen
Social Work
11 1
Patricia Keim
Pre-Social Work
Gordon Person
Biology
Ruth Sorensen
Elementary Education
Glenn Havumaki
Psychology and Christianity
1 1 2
Barry Anderson
Psychology
Richard Swanson
Anthropology and Biology
Gary McCann
English
Judith Nelson
Elementary Education
Susan Taft
Elementary Education
Timothy Brubaker
Sociology and Christianity
Lois Pearson
Elementary Education
=
1 1 5
Jacqueline Goodman
Elementary Education
Donald Cervin
Anthropology
Robert Bryant
Anthropology and Speech
Janet Burns
Sociology and Social Work
Carolyn Dahlby
Sociology and Social Work
Richard Trinity
Chemistry
1 14
Carolyn Niehouse
Sociology and Pre-Social Work
Duane Lindblom
Sociology
Thomas Kusant
Christianity
Janet Schoenherr
Anthropology
Elizabeth Unger
Elementary Education
Larry Swanson
Social Science
116 1 1 7
Mark Lundholm
Psychology
Carol Harder
Elementary Education
Warren Magnuson
Anthropology
119
. • 7 ,,,,ostoes
118
Larry Olsen
Sociology
Sheryl Nordin
Pre-Social Work
Kenneth Weller
Business and Economics
Virginia Ogilvie
Pre-Social Work and Sociology
121
Dean Gibson
History
Karen Rodberg
Biology
Faith Karlson
Art
Thomas Mesaros
History and Political Science
Eva Heinmets
Pre-Social Work and Sociology
Jim Youngquist
Anthropology and Social Science
120
Rodney Larson
Judith Roushey History
Elementary Education
-4011,41,0""'
Joanne Smith
Music Education
Lorna Torgerson
Elementary Education
Sandra Port
Natural Science
Donald Nelson
Political Science
122 123
Randy Stauter
History
David Stewart
Social Studies
Jo Ellen Worrell
Applied Music
Nancy Weaver
Anthropology
Forrest Peterson
History
Lynn Hansen
Art Education
Nola Port
Applied Music
124 Gayle Guthrie 125
Elementary Education
Ronald Roper
General Arts
Karla Ask
Elementary Education
Winifred Peterson
Music Education
Thomas Stocking
History and Political Science
Reuben Rosnau
Psychology
Kenneth Irons
126 Chemistry
Peter Roemer
Biology and Chemistry
Judith Hatfield
Social Studies 127
James Bussiere
Art
Linda Krause
Psychology and
Pre-Social Work
Carol Dupire
Elementary Education
128 David Pound
Sociology
Janet Hurt
Speech
Gail Klemetti
Music Education
Mildred Healy
Elementary Education
Dean Madison
Elementary Education
129
Marjorie Erickson
Speech
Cheryl Gemar
Pre-Social Work
Elizabeth Smith
Elementary Education,
Frederick Swedberg
History
Maurice Zaffke
Art
Terrence Carlson
History and
Social Studies
130 Eileen Nollmeyer
Elementary Education
David Skurdahl
Applied Music
Janell Hastings
Elementary Education 131
Bruce Otto
Chemistry
Lawrence Day
Social Science
133
Spencer Johnson
Chemistry and
Natural Science
Douglas Carlson
132 Philosophy
Susan Kahl
Elementary Education
James Liew
Christianity
David Rodquist
History
Lois Bjork
Social Work
Renae Bjorklund
Elementary Education
Stephen Lambrides
Social Studies
Donald White
Chemistry
Edith Toman
Elementary Education 135
Thomas Swanson
Psychology and Sociology
Peggy Vangness
Elementary Education
Charlene Roe
Pre-Social Work
Andrew Feldman
134 Psychology
Nancy Maxwell
English
Judith Keim
Natural Science
Martha Coyle
Sociology and Pre-Social Work
Hal Shaver
History
136
Richard Hunter
Social Science
Rudy King
History
Robert Stump
History
Lynn Wilson
Pre-Social Work
137
Judith Steinke
Elementary Education
Dean Ericson
Christianity
Carol Larsen
Elementary Education
Gregory Saracoff
Elementary Education
Ronald Skon
Elementary Education
Nadine Dueholm
138 Sociology and Pre-Social Work
William Goodwin
Christianity
Joanne Olson
Elementary Education 139
Bill Weigel
Christianity
Pamela Nordell
140 Social Science and Christianity
Gary Hasselblad
Social Science
Sandra Adams
Psychology, Sociology and Social Work
Kay Ekbom
Elementary Education
Timothy Weko
English
Janis Salzman
English
Anne Louise Hanson
Sociology 1 4 1
•
Bonnie Rudeen
Art
David Shupe
142
Anthropology
143
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tip,
Glancing through these pages the experiences and memories of a
year past are now recorded. Hopefully you were even able to cap-ture
a mood that might have been prevalent during your year here.
But when recording the activities of any individual or group there
is always a vagueness; a hint of the abstract. How do you show
love, hate, fear or confusion between the covers of an annual? Cer-tainly
these are part of your learning experiences. No one can say,
with full knowledge, that the only thing to college life is academ-ics.
To maintain such a position would be to say that socials,
friends, sports or even living together has no special significance
in growing. The abstract, the feelings, were very much a parr of
your life at Bethel. Let us explore into the intangible. Try to re-member
them for they will always be part of you.
IN
EVERY
END
THERE
WANT 11]:
YET, THERE IS AL-WAYS
HOPE. FOR
INDWELLED IN EACH
PERSON IS A WANT-ING,
A HUNGER WHICH
ONLY CHRIST CAN FILL
BEGINNING;
BUT
TO
SOME
THERE
IS
NO
END.
The old is all they have; the mem-ories,
the trials, the pain, the
joy. All that is left is emptiness.
They look ahead; the future — but
the young fill that void.
The young have everything. They
plan for the future for they have
all of life ahead of them. There
is something new everyday; some-thing
exciting. Why look back —
what's back there is past.
THE IIESSI ill, SO1 or 11111, kIll ni k111;ti, 1:111111ot 1,111111S, 1111111I 11:11E,
SUDDENLY THERE'S
LIFE, A NEW MEAN-ING.
YOU GAIN THE
ESSENCE OF BEING.
ALL EMOTIONS ARE
YOURS - YOU SENSE
THE ETERNAL, THE
BEAUTIFUL. YOU
ARE FILLED WITH
SOMETHING MAGNIFI-CENT.
Tnoit is mitt in it
Tnero
no mops. to ono
nos ever been thefe.
8e1 we can matte out footprints
all around us. each one
made by someone unique,
none of them made by a person
who is a Xerox copy of
someone else
It is not a goal that intrigues us,
but a dimension, not a tail-safe
kto-B-to-C
procedure tor
poin but
ainvIng at some static t
ibility of a glimpse
the pOss
,
even it it is blurred, Of
what rriipt be out there
tr,e to!tif0
Arid :
are banished by
Anti
e•w
WITHIN THE ENDLESS BOUNDARIES OF THE UNIVERSE
THERE IS ONE MOVING FORCE WHICH HAS NO EQUATION,
NO HEIGHT, NO LENGTH; IT HAS ONLY DEPTH. IT
STIRS ONE TO SUCH A POINT THAT HE KNOWS NO REASON.
STILL, ITS EFFECT WILL SOOTHE THE REJECTED AND
DISAPPOINTED MIND. TO LOVE IS TO BE YOURSELF.
TO DROP THE VEIL OF YOUR PRIDE AND ENVY. TO BE
ACCEPTED AS YOU ARE, AND TO ACCEPT OTHERS IN THE
SAME LIGHT. TO BE - AND TO WANT TO BE.
0
I
•
6
4—
3
tap
•
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411,
4.■
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fur
•
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parents are outraged because of student
protest the young scream against the
apathy of the older generation. the words
war and peace have become meaningless within
the framework of their original context. on
the opposite page you find the "citizens creed"
it was written and upheld by a generation
passed on. look over it . . . see if it still
applies as it did in the past. reflect on
it today, be comparing it to yesterday and
applying it to tomorrow . search for a
meaning, if there is one; ponder on
the reasoning; there might be some .
I believe in the United States of America as a government
°Ole people, by the people, for the people; whose just powers
are derived from the consent of the governed; a democracy in a
Republic; a sovereign Nation of many sovereign States, a perfect
„ Union, one and thseparable; established upon those principles of
freedom, equality, justice and humanity for which American
patriots sacrificed their lives and fortunes.
,„ I therefore believe it is my duty to my Country to love it; to
support its constitution; to obey its laws; to respect its flag;
d to defend it against all enemies.
We may not speak, or we may shout, we may go c.o. or we
may enlist in whatever cause is current and electrifying;
but react we will, react we must. We have just emerged
from a cataclysmic decade. The rapidity with which it
passed is a fascinating and, to an extent, fearful
thing. We have gone from childhood to teen-ager to adult.
We have now the responsibility of making it possible for
the children of today to become the leaders of their
tomorrows. May God give us grace.
Martin Mauk
Editor
INDEX
Marilyn Stromberg 68
Thomas Stocking 127
Cheryl Swanson 56
Larry Swanson 9, 116
Richard A. Swanson 112
Richard C. Swanson 22, 82
Thomas Swanson 29, 134
Valerie Swanson 2, 20
Federick Swedberg 131
Jerry Swerdsrud 47
Susan Taft 39, 113
Steven Terrell (F) 103
Susan Tollefson 13
Edith Toman 135
Linda Toren 119
Lorna Torgerson 112
Laurel Toy 28
Jack Trager (F) 74, 77
Dee Traudt 79
Richard Trinity 114
Ronald Troxel 46
Patricia Tyberg 104
Kenneth Ullmann 59
Elizabeth Unger 16, 116
Thomas VanAtwerp 57
Peggy Vangness 31, 134
Sidney Veenstra 25
Victor Verni 13, 46
Gary Vogel 56
Robert Vork 88, 89
Wendell Wahlin 23
Debra Walker 36
Rebecca Waller 56
Penny Watkins 68, 70, 71, 72
Diane Watlov 13
Sharon Watson 47
Nancy Weaver 124
Bill Weigel 140
Timothy Weko 74, 76, 140
Kenneth Weller 121
Donald White 107, 135
David Whitney (F) 21
Peter Wicklund cover, 150
Norma Wilcox 86
Lynn Wilson
John Wilzewske 82
Joyce Wolff 68
Enoch Wong Yiu Chuen 56
Celia Woods 56
Jo Ellen Worrell 57, 124
Kathleen Wright 13
Janice Wyma 16, 20
James Youngquist 120
Paul Youngquist 22
Richard Zaderaka 94
Maurice Zaffke 6, 46, 131
Mark Zosel 20
Paul Zosel 82
Sandra Adams 19, 55, 141
Linda Ahlstrand 110
Jean Allison 17, 56
James Amelsberg 67
Julie Amelsberg 27, 29
Deborah Amundson 20, 69
Barry Anderson 25, 81, 112
Craig Anderson 14
Daniel Anderson 23
Keith Anderson 18
Mark Anderson 22
Thomas Anderson 71, 72
Eleanor Andrews 68
William Ankerberg 10, 94
Gary Ask 96, 103
Karla Ask 126
Dean Backstrom 18
Harold Baker 16
Marilee Benson 42
Richard Berggren 46, 103
David Berry 77
The Bird 147
Lois Bjork 56, 133
Renae Bjorklund 135
Jeannine Bohlmeyer (F) 56
Wallace Borner 23
Robert Brodin 77, 78, 94
Timothy Brubaker 115
Carolyn Bryan 11
Robert Bryant 28, 114
James Burns 114
James Bussiere 128
Rachel Campbell 13
Robert Carlsen (F) 16
Douglas Carlson 83, 132
Dwight Carlson 22
G. William Carlson (F) 46
James Carlson 66, 103
Linda Carlson 119
Manley Carlson 56
Philip Carlson (F) 46
Terrence Carlson 66, 130
Thomas Carlson 29
Joyce Carpenter 57
Paul Casey 14, 18, 20, 82
Donald Cervin 115
Patricia Chase 47, 105
Jan Christenson 11
Gary Clark 10, 67, 94, 95
Harold (Bo) Conrad 19, 88
Martha Coyle 137
Marlys Crandall 110
Carolyn Dahlby 56, 114
Roy Dalton (F) 103
Shelly Danielson 86
Donna Davis 30, 31, 152
Lawrence Day 133
James Delich 94
Linda Delmor 15
Philip Deming 85
Richard Dick 79
Ronald Dischinger 37
Robert Downey 80, 110
Nadine Dueholm 138
158
Steve Duininck 12, 13, 19, 20, 46,
Carol Dupire 128
John Eagen 82
John Ecklein 79
Glenace Ecklund 42
Timothy Eddy 94
David Ekbom 81
Gregory Ekbom
Kay Ekbom 140
Thomas Eklo 16
Robert Elliot 16
Eldon Elseth 55
Linda Enchelmayer 56, 57
Bonnie Erickson 19, 30, 31
Dean Ericson 111
Dean L. Ericson 94, 138
Marjorie Erickson 130
Wayne Erickson 47
Jon Fagerson (F) 47, 87
Michal Fail 66
Douglas Fargo 78
James Feldman 77
Andrew Feldman 76, 134
Dale Finch 82, 83
Kenneth Fisher 84, 85
David Frykman 35
Stephen Gabel 16, 42
Shelly Gabor 56
Cheryl Gemar 21, 47, 56, 130
Dean Gibson 120
Eugene Glader (F) 22, 46
Carol Glewwe 21
Jacquelin Goodman 16, 56, 107
John Goodman 47, 103
William Goodwin 139
Lee Franlund 23, 80
Joanne Grant 50, 68
David Greener 22, 94
Samuel Griffith 84, 85
Melanie Gruman 86
Robert Gustafson 82
Gayle Guthrie 125
LeAnn Hagen 50, 66
Anne Louise Hanson 38, 141
Harley Hanson 82
Lynn Hansen 125
Stephen Hanson 94
Carol Harder 117
Lea Ann Harkness 68
Richard Harris (F) 46
Gary Hasselblad 96, 103, 141
Janell Hastings 131
Judith Hatfield 127
Glenn Havumaki 113
David Healy 79
Gerald Healy (F) 17, 72
Mary Jo Healy 66
Mildred Healy 129
Paula Hedman 38
Eva Heinmets 120
Janice Hendricksen 68
Timothy Hieb 82
Connie Hill 13, 91
Susan Hillmer 68
88, 89 Jack Hoehl 77
Sharon Hough 20
Philip Humbert 55
Richard Hunter 56, 136
Janet Hurt 129
Daniel Hutchson 17
Kenneth Irons 126
Margaret Jackson 10
Carroll Jarp 35
Emmanuel Jerry Jenfa 83
Barb J. Johnson 38, 39
Barb L. Johnson 13, 66
Constance Johnson 2
Eugene Johnson (F) 18
James Johnson (F) 46
James I. Johnson 56
Janet S. Johnson 56
Laurelyn Johnson 103
Marleen Johnson 68
Paul E. Johnson 110
Russell Johnson (F) 10, 56
Spencer Johnson 82, 132
William C. Johnson (F) 14, 19
Gordon Johnston 79
Charles Jordan 51
Diane Jorgenson 56
Susan Kahl 132
Mary Kapella 67
Faith Karlsson 121
Judith Keim 136
Patricia Keim 112
Rudy King 136
Ruth King 56
Mark Kingsbeck 43
Gail Klemetti 16, 129
Miriam Kling 9, 29, 119
Jeffery Knighton 79
Ava Kolstad 102
Kenneth Kraft 14
Donovan Kramer cover, 53
Linda Krause 128
Faye Kulbitski 28, 85
Thomas Kusant 116
Stephen Lambrides 82, 135
John Landberg 24
Carol Larsen 19, 27, 139
Bradley Larson 10
Daniel Larson 74, 77
Donald Larson (F) 46
John Larson 82
Rodney Larson 17, 123
Timothy Larson 23
Maurice Lawson (Pastor) 67, 103
Carol Leach 51
Leslie Leaf 20
Lois Lehman 103
Laurin Leih 2
Arthur Lewis (F) 35
Dennis Liedstrand 81
Wichan Liewudomsinchai (James Liew)
Lynette Lilja 119
Dean Lindberg cover, 11, 69
Duane Lindblom 117
Pamela Lindvall 19, 31, 30, 68
Becky Loge 56
Mark Lundholm 117
John Lundgren 103
President Carl Lundquist 20, 107
Gary McCann 113
Shirley McCauly 56
Melissa McCool 36
Maree McKinnis 38, 39
Carol McLain 39
Hugh McLeod 21, 102, 105
Dean Madison 129
Warren Magnuson 118
Ruth Manderson 66
James Mason (F) 103
Leroy Mattson 82
Martin Mauk 83
Nancy Maxwell 136
Tomas Meeks (F) 77
Patricia Meineke 12, 13
Tomas Mesaros 22, 121
Sally Miller 13
Daniel Mogck 82
Lauretta Mogck 71, 72, 73
Oliver Mogck (F) 57
Thomas Molin 77
Carolyn Moline 30, 31
William Moline 56
Virginia Morrow 25, 27
Anne Mulder 86
Bruce Mulligan 27
Susan Neave 38, 39
Joy Nebergall 36
Carol Nelson 35
Christine Nelson cover, 13, 35, 46
Darrel Nelson 99
Donald Nelson 123
Judith Nelson 113
Karen Nelson 26, 27, 29
John Nemecek 79
David Nethercott 82
Richard Neufeld 9, 11, 87
Janice Nietzell 30
Carolyn Niehouse 117
Eileen Nollmeyer 130
Charles Norberg 79
Pamela Nordell 140
Karen Nordenstrom 56
Sheryl Nordin 118
Gordon Nordmark 74, 76, 78
Jon Nordstrom 23, 29
Virginia Ogilvie 56, 121
Joanne Olson 139
Robert Olsen 80, 103, 111
Larry Olsen 118
John Olson 79
Roxanne Olson 68
Dean Virgil Olson 103, 107
Bradley Olssen
Bruce Otto 133
132 William Painter 94
A. Dean Pearson 111
Beverly Pearson 111
David Pelto 13, 43
Carol Pearson 30
Lois Pearson 115
Mildred Penner 25, 103
Gordon Person 112
Nola Port 125
Sandra Port 123
David Pound 25, 29, 46, 98, 103, 128
Kathleen Quick 42
Karen Reed 68
Diane Reynolds 30
Lowell Richardson 43
Claudia Riegler 30
Sarah Robertson 18, 27, 107, 119
Doris Robinson 38, 39
George Robinson (F) 46, 67
Karen Rodberg 120
James Rodgers (F) 82
David Rodquist 133
Charlene Roe 134
Peter Roemer 56, 72, 73, 127
Nancy Roos 36, 56
Ronald Roper 126
Reuben Rosnau 126
Lucinda Rostollan 105
Judith Roushey 122
Bonnie Rudeen 143
Marjorie Rusche 55
Janis Salzman 141
Sandra Sanford 55
Gregory Saracoff 17, 139
Dale Saxon 69
Lauren Schmiess 37
Linda Schmid 68
Jack Schmidt 47
Janet Schoenherr 116
Gail Segreti 19, 30, 103
Karen Shafland 30
Hal Shaver 137
Maurice Shields (F) 46
David Shupe 35, 62, 63, 142
Della Shupe 142
William Scott Sievert
Murray Sitte 12, 103
Sibyl Sjulson 68
Nancy Skoglund 9
Ronald Skon 138
David Skurdahl 131
Timothy Skurdahl 56
Ruth Sleeman 56
Elizabeth Smith 131
Joanne Smith 122
Raymond Smith 102
Robert Smith (F) 106
David Solfetl 14, 79
Ruth Sorensen 107, 113
Gary Speakman 22
Gregory Speck 79
Delores Stanghelle 36, 47
Randy Stauter 124
Richard Steinhaus (F) 46
Judith Steinke 107, 138
Dale Stephens (F) 46
Roderick Mark Steward 13, 67, 82
David Stewart 124
Mary Stewart 86
159
FOOTBALL
Bethel 6
Bethel 6
Bethel 0
Bethel 0
Bethel 13
Bethel 27
Bethel 12
Bethel 13
Bethel 0
Macalester 59
Dakota Wesleyan 32
Northland 18
U. of M., Morris 31
Jamestown 62
Huron 55
Northwestern, Ia. 34
Bemidji 57
Hamline 50
SOCCER
Bethel 3
Bethel 0
Bethel 4
Bethel 2
Bethel 0
Bethel 1
Bethel 2
Bethel 7
Bethel 1
Bethel 0
Pillsbury 0
Trinity 3
Bethany Lutheran 3
Carleton 3
Lakehead (Canada) 2
St. John's J.V. 1
U. of Minnesota 0
Macalester J.V. 2
Int. Student Council
(U. of Minnesota) 1
Hamline 1
WRESTLING
Bethel 26
Bethel 11
Bethel 6
Bethel 31
Bethel 11
Bethel 27
Bethel 9
Bethel 26
Bethel 9
Bethel 13
Bethel 38
Bethel 6
Bethel 29
Bethel 25
Bethel 46
Bethel 19
Bethel 6
Bethel 41
Bethel 16
Pillsbury Tournament:
St. John's
St. Paul Bible
Lea College
Southwest
Pillsbury
Carleton
Concordia, St. Paul 16
Huron 28
Pillsbury 34
St. Thomas 11
U. of M., Morris 29
Concordia, St. Paul 15
Jamestown 29
Northland 16
St. John's Univ. 27
U. of M., Duluth 27
Macalester 8
Southwest College 32
St. Mary's 11
Hamline 8
St. Paul Bible 0
Northland 19
Southwest College 31
Concordia 3
Pillsbury 26
Bethel 29
105
8
84
98
75
40
Bethel Sports Scores
BASKETBALL
Bethel 45 Briar Cliff (Ia.) 56
Bethel 57 Dordt (Ia.) 72
Bethel 68 Mayville 64
Bethel 49 Carleton 56
Bethel 56 Lakehead 57
Bethel 53 U. of M., Morris 59
Bethel 50 Macalester 48
(2 overtimes)
Bethel 70 Dakota Wesleyan 91
Bethel 77 U. of M., Morris 91
Bethel 57 Westmar (Ia.) 64
Bethel 59 Dordt (Ia.) 56
Bethel 55 Northeastern Ill. 54
Bethel 53 Lea College (Minn.) 77
Bethel 60 Lea College (Minn.) 62
Bethel 39 Winona 50
Bethel 80 Dordt (Ia.) 72
Bethle 57 Concordia 52
Bethel 70 Northland (Wisc.) 51
Bethel 44 Briar Cliff (Ia.) 59
Bethel 53 Mankato State 57
(overtime)
Bethel 54 Hamline 55
Bethel 61 Concordia 62
Bethel 48 Northland (Wisc.) 57
Bethel 47 Northwestern (Ia.) 54
GOLF
Bethel 419 Hamline 404
Bethel 9 1 Lea College 8%
Bethel 415 S.P.B.C. 464
Bethel 526 St. Thomas 475
Bethel 434 Stout State 398
Cougar Invitational 14th.454
Bethel 416 Eau Claire 381
Bethel 8 River Falls 10
N.A.I.A. District 21st - 363
Honeywell Course
Bethel 327 Concordia 353
Bethel 51/2 Lea College 121/2
Beaver Invitational 8th - 426
Bethel 317 Concordia 342
CROSS COUNTRY
River Falls 22, Stout State 63, Bethel 70, Eau Claire 72.
Bemidji 19, Bethel 58, U. of M., Duluth 60.
Golden Valley Lutheran 47, Bethel 48, Hamline 49,
Gustavus Adolphus 68.
Bethel 42, Stout State 47, Eau Claire 54, Gustavus
Adolphus 75.
St. John 43, S. Dakota State 78, St. Cloud 90, Augs-burg
100, Macalaster 110, Bemidji 177, Moorhead 198,
St. Thomas 210, Southwest 229, Golden Valley 253,
Duluth 269, Bethel 298, and Gustavus Adolphus 306.
Winona 19 Bethel 36
Hamline 20 Bethel 35
NAIA District 13 Championship - St. John's 34, St.
Cloud 52, Augsburg 78, Winona 104, Hamline 129,
Macalaster 135, U. of M., Duluth 162, Bethel 168.
BASEBALL
Hamline 10 Bethel 1
Bethel 6 Concordia 0
Northland #1 7 Bethel 0
Northland #2 3 Bethel 0
Bethel 4 N.C.B.C. 3
St. Olaf #1 22 Bethel 3
St. Olaf #2 12 Bethel 2
U. of M., Duluth 5 Bethel 3
U. of M., Duluth 1 Bethel 0
Albert Lea #1 4 Bethel 3
Albert Lea #2 8 Bethel 2
Carleton #1 8 Bethel 7
Bethel 3 Carleton #2 1
Bethel 21 Golden Valley 15
Bethel 11 St. Paul Bible 3
Bethel 11 N.C.B.C. 6
TRACK
March 7 St. Olaf 109, Bethel 31 Southwest
27.
14 Stout 122, Northland 29 Bethel 26,
Eau Claire 8, Golden Valley 6.
21 S2 072e . rior 56 1/2, Northland 31, Bethel
30 Bethel 79, Southwest Baptist 65.
31 School of Ozarks 113, Ozark Bible
April 2
College 8, Bethel 60.
Tarkio College - SNOWED OUT
4 U. of South Dakota Invitational:
Mankato 76 1/2, USD 59, Northern
State 351/2, Jamestown 28, Southern
State 181/2, Northwestern 14,
Morningside 14, Augustana 7,
Dakota Wesleyan 7, Huron 7,
Sioux Falls 3, Worthington 1 1/2,
Bethel 1, Wayne State 0, Yankton
0, Midland 0.
11 Manito Relays at St. Olaf.
15 River Falls 111, Augsburg 691,
UMD 42, Bethel 311/2.
18 Gustie Relays: Hamline 671/2, St.
Thomas 67, Duluth 52, Bethel 22 112,
Gustavus 8.
27 Bethel 70, Pillsbury 491/2, Concor-dia
39 1/2 Anoka Ramsey 20.
May 2 St. Thomas, U. of Duluth: Duluth
89, St. Thomas 82 1/2, Bethel 38,
Hamline 371/2, Southwest State 6.
9 Bethel Invitational: Bethel 89 1/2, Lea
51, Pillsbury 31 Northland 29 1/2,
Concordia 25, UMM 23, SW 13.
12 Macalaster Invitational: No Team
Score
Phil James - 4th in 440
Mile Relay - 5th
TENNIS
2 Eau Claire 7
2 St. Thomas 7
7 River Falls 2
2 Stout State 7
9 Concordia (St. Paul) 0
3 Gustavus Adolphus 6
7 Augsburg 2
6 St. Cloud State 3
9 U. of M. Morris 0
2 Winona State 7
9 Concordia (St. Paul) 0
Bethel
Bethel
Bethel
Bethel
Bethel
Bethel
Bethel
Bethel
Bethel
Bethel
Bethel
160 161
Wednesday
7:00 P.M. Bible
Study and Prayer
Services
Bible School
Morning Worship
C.Y.F. Groups
Evening Gospel Service
Welcome
Congratulations
Class of
1970
BBEETT HANY
BAPTIST
CHURCH
MINNEHAHA BAPTIST CHURCH
Congratulations to Class of 1970
from
GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH
East 38th St. At 22nd Ave. So.
Minneapolis, Minn.
Peter D. Todd, Pastor
David A. Reynolds, Assistant to Pastor
"You also, as living stones, are being built up as a spiritual
house ..
I Peter 2:5
Sunday
9:45 A.M.
11:00 A.M.
6:00 P.M.
7:00 P.M.
Located at .. .
41st Ave. South and 42nd Street in Mpls.
2025 W. Skillman
at Cleveland
Albert Winham, Pastor
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
1020 Harmon Place
Minneapolis, Minn. 55403
Clifford Holm — Pastor
CONGRATULATIONS
to the
Class of 1970
from
FALCON HEIGHTS
BETHEL BOOKSTORE
Congratulations Class of 1970
ROSE BOWL LANES
2057 North Snelling Ave.
631-1142
631-1143
40 illine during the week
45 ./line on weekends
BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH
Box 933
Gardner, Massachusetts
Best Wishes
to the
Class of '70
from
1544 W. Larpenteur Ave. 646-6561
Just East of Snelling
BETHEL COFFEE SHOP
Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
Monday-Saturday 9:00 p.m.-10:30 p.m.
Saturday 8:30 a.m.-11:00 a.m.
Sunday 4:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m.
Mrs. Margaret Anderson, Manager
CHICAGO'S EDGEWATER BAPTIST
CHURCH
Hollywood at Glenwood
D. Thurlow Yaxley, Pastor
FOR THE WORD OF GOD AND THE TESTIMONY OF JESUS CHRIST!
on savings certificates compounded quarterly
Congratulations and Best Wishes
Class of 1970
from
BETHLEHEM
720 13th Ave. South
BAPTIST Mpls., Minnesota
Phone 338-7653
CHURCH
Pastor — Robert A. Featherstone
Associate — William L. Malam
Sundays
Worship 8:30 and 11:00 a.m.
Bible School 9:45 a.m.
Evening Praise 7:00 p.m.
Wednesdays
Family Night 7:15 p.m.
Transportation provided from Bodien
PATRONS
Mr. James Treece Mr. Richard Ward
East Park Baptist Church
Robert Bergerud, Manager
Marvin Fuller, Supply Manager
CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES
Class of 1970
from the
OLIVET BAPTIST CHURCH
3233 Oakdale Avenue
Robbinsdale, Minnesota
decade
of
invmolivsesimonent
& growth baptist general conference
IDWEST BAPTIST
CONFERENCE
6278 N. Cicero Ave., Chicago, 111.60646
Spire
Staff
Martin E. Mauk, Editor-in-Chief
Mark Erickson, Assistant Editor
Elizabeth Eckstrom, Copy Editor
Becky Clauer, Layout Editor
Copy
ti Kathy Quick
Advisors Cindy Rostollan
Tom Knapp
Mark Olson
Jeannine Bohlmeyer
Office Co-ordinator
Photography
Jean Allison
Publishing Company
American Yearbook Co.
Burt Hedstrom, Representative
A special thanks to Mr. James Treece
for his photography of the seniors.
We want to give credit and appreciation
to Newsweek Magazine for the use of
their pictures on pages 48 and 156.
Office Personnel Carol Leach
Connie Hill
Candy Johnson
Pat Meineke
Roxanne Olson
Diane Watlov
Jim Amelsberg
Paul Casey
Dick Halverson
Donovan Krammer
David Park
Bryron Warkenten
Exchange Correspondence
Cindy Smith
Penny Watkins
Public Relations
Editorial Secretaries
Barb Donham
Martha Sandbloom